Another graduation address by a Trump administration official, another protest.

Less than two weeks after students turned a commencement speech by Trump's education secretary into a controversial appearance, graduating seniors at Indiana’s University of Notre Dame on Friday were planning to stage a walkout protest during the commencement address by Vice President Mike Pence on Sunday.

The reason?

Protest organizers say that while he was Indiana’s governor, and now as vice president, “Pence has targeted the civil rights protections of members of LBGT+ community, rejected the Syrian refugee resettlement program, supported an unconstitutional ban of religious minorities, and fought against sanctuary cities.”

The protest group’s Twitter account, @WeStandForND, encouraged students to “stand up and walk out once Mike Pence starts to speak” and to “respectfully and quietly exit the stadium.”

https://twitter.com/WeStandForND/status/864502392750002177

At least two Facebook eventpages for the protest showed close to 400 people as “going” and more than 1,400 people as “interested,” but organizers told ThinkProgress that 50 to 100 people could walk out on Sunday. The Twitter hashtag #WalkOutND was also being shared.

Pence is hardly the first elected official to face a protest at a university commencement, and he is not the first member of President Donald Trump’s cabinet to face a tough crowd.

Most recently, students at Bethune-Cookman University, a historically black university, on May 10 booed and turned their back on Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos when she spoke at their graduation ceremony. The incident was caught on video and widely shared on social media.

To some, the graduation protest was deemed bold and courageous. To others, it was considered a disrespectful publicity stunt.

Likewise, critics of the planned Notre Dame graduation protest argued that participating it was evidence of students being weak, unprepared for the real world and tools of the liberal teaching at universities across America.

Commencement protests are nothing new, and in this divided nation, people will debate whether the merits or methods of protest are sound. If the protests go as planned with students quietly leaving their seats on Sunday, it will be a contrast to the protest of DeVos at Bethune-Cookman, which was loud and ruckus.